Skip to content

MuggleNet

  • Site
    • Contact Us & FAQ
    • History
    • Meet the Team
    • MuggleNet Live!
    • Press
    • Publications
    • Special Projects
    • Volunteer with Us!
    • Year in Review
  • Podcasts
    • Alohomora!
    • Full Circle
    • LITHAPPENS
    • Potterversity
    • Promptly Potter
    • SpeakBeasty
  • Harry Potter
    • Book Quotes
    • Book Series
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Film Series
    • Hogwarts Library
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • Fantastic Beasts
    • Book
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Fantastic Beasts Film Quotes
    • Film Series
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • The Quibbler
    • Owl Post
    • Bathilda’s Notebook
    • The Department of MYTHteries
    • The Dirigible Plum
    • Into the Floo
    • Muggle Studies
    • The Pensieve Papers
    • The Three Broomsticks
    • April Fools’
    • The Quibbler Vault
  • The Daily Prophet
    • Book Trolley
    • Editorials
    • Event Reports
    • Exclusive Interviews
    • Features
    • Giveaways
    • Listicles
    • Merchandise Reviews
    • Movie Reviews
    • Television Reviews
    • Theater Reviews
    • Wizolympics
  • Muggle World
    • Charity
    • Exhibitions
    • J.K. Rowling
    • MinaLima
    • Quadball
    • Studio Tours
    • Theatrical Play
    • Theme Parks
    • Wizarding World Digital
  • Fans & Fun
    • Crazy Caption Contest
    • Fan Focus
    • Fandom
    • Fandom Sortings
    • Fandom Timeline
    • Fun Lists
    • Games and Trivia
    • GNOMEs
    • Potter DIY
    • Potter Weddings
    • #PotterItForward
    • Rosmerta’s Recipes
    • Song Parodies
    • Wizard Rock
    • Wizarding Wordle
  • Site
    • Contact Us & FAQ
    • History
    • Meet the Team
    • MuggleNet Live!
    • Press
    • Publications
    • Special Projects
    • Volunteer with Us!
    • Year in Review
  • Podcasts
    • Alohomora!
    • Full Circle
    • LITHAPPENS
    • Potterversity
    • Promptly Potter
    • SpeakBeasty
  • Harry Potter
    • Book Quotes
    • Book Series
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Film Series
    • Hogwarts Library
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • Fantastic Beasts
    • Book
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Fantastic Beasts Film Quotes
    • Film Series
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • The Quibbler
    • Owl Post
    • Bathilda’s Notebook
    • The Department of MYTHteries
    • The Dirigible Plum
    • Into the Floo
    • Muggle Studies
    • The Pensieve Papers
    • The Three Broomsticks
    • April Fools’
    • The Quibbler Vault
  • The Daily Prophet
    • Book Trolley
    • Editorials
    • Event Reports
    • Exclusive Interviews
    • Features
    • Giveaways
    • Listicles
    • Merchandise Reviews
    • Movie Reviews
    • Television Reviews
    • Theater Reviews
    • Wizolympics
  • Muggle World
    • Charity
    • Exhibitions
    • J.K. Rowling
    • MinaLima
    • Quadball
    • Studio Tours
    • Theatrical Play
    • Theme Parks
    • Wizarding World Digital
  • Fans & Fun
    • Crazy Caption Contest
    • Fan Focus
    • Fandom
    • Fandom Sortings
    • Fandom Timeline
    • Fun Lists
    • Games and Trivia
    • GNOMEs
    • Potter DIY
    • Potter Weddings
    • #PotterItForward
    • Rosmerta’s Recipes
    • Song Parodies
    • Wizard Rock
    • Wizarding Wordle
  • Cormoran Strike Series / J.K. Rowling

Book Review: “The Cuckoo’s Calling” by Robert Galbraith

by Caleb Graves · July 18, 2013

J.K. Rowling does it again. Only this time, the best-selling author pens her latest novel, The Cuckoo’s Calling, as Robert Galbraith, recently revealed as her pseudonym.

The following review is SPOILER FREE.

Just as in The Casual Vacancy, this new crime novel departs greatly from Rowling’s Harry Potter days, so Potterheads jumping into the author’s new book should expect such a gap. That being said, similarities to both Potter and Casual Vacancy can be found littered throughout this skillfully plotted and exciting investigative novel.

The most obvious match to Casual Vacancy is that The Cuckoo’s Calling starts off with a death that drives the entire story. Readers are met with this tragic death of supermodel Lula Landry, also known as Cuckoo. The media begins to run the celebrity’s death, judged as a suicide, just as we would expect in our own world: without any end in sight. But soon enough, the journey for the real story behind the Cuckoo’s death and the calling from her flat begins.

Enter Cormoran Strike: a private detective, returned from Afghanistan after losing his leg, who is short on both business and cash. Following his unexpected pairing with new temporary assistant Robin Ellacott, the sleuthing begins.

Throughout the novel, Rowling addresses deep societal woes with which many of her readers are familiar: racism, celebrity privilege, media obsession, and lacking police work, just to name a few. She skillfully weaves these themes into her characters’ lives and the ongoing plot, then leaves them, appropriately, just as they are in our own lives: far from resolved.

Fans of Rowling’s work in Harry Potter will rediscover the author’s unmatched skill at characterization. She fully brings her characters to life, through unique names and very vivid descriptions. She gives us a protagonist, Strike, who is very real. Not only does she avoid taking the basic route of making him fully “good” or “bad,” but she even avoids the popular route of creating an in-between, “grayish” character. He is precisely what you would expect as a private detective, holding close to his own life and the problems it contains. The military background provides reasoning behind his sometimes hard nature, as well as his ability to push through the toughest of obstacles.

He is brought more to life by the growing relationship he builds with Robin, his new assistant. While there certainly could have been more on the development side of the determined partner, she brings a compelling contrast to the world of celebrity obsession. Rowling is a genius in using characters as foils to plot points, and she does that again masterfully with Robin.

As for the story itself, it is a true crime novel to the core. The reader slowly gathers the clues, tries to fit oddly-shaped pieces together, meets a few startling surprises and probably often switches between potential suspects. Even after Strike has clearly come to a conclusion, the reader is left to solve the mystery alongside Robin until, at last, the true story comes forth. As someone who does not often pick up detective and crime novels, I found myself rather engaged throughout, particularly as the last pieces begin to come together in the last quarter of the novel.

It is a completely new journey for the author, and she has certainly come a long way since introducing us to Harry outside the front door of Number 4, Privet Drive. But through a series about a boy wizard, a novel about small town relationships and politics, and now a London crime novel, one thing has remained consistent through the pages of J.K. Rowling’s writing: her unparalleled ability to make one read, pause, and reflect on how the story’s bigger themes are so present and relevant in their own lives, making the story feel that much more intimate.

Social:

  • Next story The Graphic Art of the “Harry Potter” Films Sweepstakes is now OPEN!
  • Previous story New “Half-Blood Prince” paperback cover from Scholastic is unveiled at SDCC

MuggleNet Archive

Important Dates

May 2025

Tue, May 13

Robert Pattinson's birthday
Recurs yearly

Cedric Diggory

Samantha Morton's birthday
Recurs yearly

Mary Lou Barebone

Zoë Wanamaker's birthday
Recurs yearly

Madam Hooch

Thu, May 15

Pomona Sprout's birthday
Recurs yearly

Fri, May 16

Stanislav Yanevski's birthday
Recurs yearly

Viktor Krum

Sun, May 18

Miriam Margolyes's birthday
Recurs yearly

Pomona Sprout

Mon, May 19

Geraldine Somerville's birthday
Recurs yearly

Lily Potter

MuggleNet podcasts are sponsored in part by Secretlab.

Thanks to its research-backed ergonomic design, including a proprietary 4-way adaptive lumbar support system, the Secretlab TITAN Evo Harry Potter Edition will comfortably support you even when you’re up to no good.

Did You Know

The curse of the Defense Against the Dark Arts position was inspired by the Spinal Tap drummers dying in bizarre circumstances.

Potter History

April 24, 2013 – It is officially announced that the Wizarding World of Harry Potter is opening at Universal Studios Hollywood in 2016 or later.

Potter Quote

“It was necessary. He’s extremely powerful. We’ve had to change his guard three times – he’s very… persuasive. So we removed his tongue.”

MuggleNet is an unofficial Harry Potter fansite.
Please email us if you have any questions or concerns.
© 1999–2025 MuggleNet.com. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | COPPA Policy | Terms of Use | Feedback


MuggleNet is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program and Bookshop.org's affiliate program, affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com and bookshop.org.